| Click | Citation |
1
|
9673
| Barker, D. G., and T. M. Barker. 2010. A review of: Dorcas, M. E., J. D. Willson and J. W. Gibbons. 2010. Can Invasive Burmese Pythons Inhabit temperate regions of the southeastern United States? Biological Invasions. Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society 45:187–189. |
2
|
10269
| Dorcas, M. E., and J. D. Willson. 2013. Hidden giants: problems associated with studying secretive invasive pythons. Pages 367–386 in W. I. Lutterschmidt (editor). Reptiles in research: investigations of ecology, physiology, and behavior from desert to sea. Nova Science Publishers, Inc., Hauppauge, New York, USA. |
3
|
9489
| Dorcas, M. E., and J. D. Willson. 2011. Invasive pythons in the United States: ecology of an introduced predator. University of Georgia Press, Athens, Georgia, USA. 156pp. |
4
|
9262
| Dorcas, M. E., J. D. Willson, and J. W. Gibbons. 2011. Can invasive Burmese Pythons inhabit temperate regions of the southeastern United States? Biological Invasions 13:793–802. |
5
|
8518
| Dorcas, M., S. Snow, F. Mazzotti, and M. Cherkiss. 2007. Thermal biology of invasive Burmese pythons (Python molurus bivittatus) in Everglades National Park. Abstract in Joint Meeting of the 23nd Annual Meeting of the American Elasmobranch Society, 87th Annual Meeting of the American Society of Ichthyologists and Herpetologists, 65th Annual Meeting of the Herpetologists' League, and the 50th Annual Meeting of the Society for the Study of Amphibians and Reptiles; 11–16 July 2007, St. Louis, Missouri, USA. |
6
|
9371
| Engeman, R., E. Jacobson, M. L. Avery, and W. E. Meshaka, Jr. 2011. The aggressive invasion of exotic reptiles in Florida with a focus on prominent species: a review. Current Zoology 57:599–612. |
7
|
9326
| Mazzotti, F. J., M. S. Cherkiss, K. M. Hart, R. W. Snow, M. R. Rochford, M. E. Dorcas, and R. N. Reed. 2011. Cold-induced mortality of invasive Burmese pythons in South Florida. Biological Invasions 13:143−151. |
8
|
9840
| Perez, L. 2012. Snake in the grass: an Everglades invasion. Pineapple Press, Sarasota, Florida, USA. 200pp. |
9
|
9072
| Reed, R. N., and G. H. Rodda. 2009. Giant constrictors: biological and management profiles and an establishment risk assessment for nine large species of pythons, anacondas, and the boa constrictor. U.S. Geological Survey Open-File Report 2009–1202. 302pp. |
10
|
9672
| Wheeler, D. G. 2009. The Everglades python: more fun than Disney World. Bulletin of the Chicago Herpetological Society 44:45. |